Early influences Paris's
Théâtre du Grand-Guignol (1897–1962) formalized the "shock horror" aesthetic, specializing in plays depicting blood, dismemberment, and psychological terror. Its visceral on‑stage gore directly inspired filmmakers to pursue similarly explicit imagery on screen. The movie
Un Chien Andalou (1929) was one of the first kinds of films that was labelled as extreme cinema.
Video nasties era In 1980s Britain, the explosion of unregulated VHS horror tapes, which were later nicknamed "
video nasties" by campaign groups, including The National Viewers' and Listeners' Association (NVALA), caused a major moral panic. Dozens of films faced prosecution under the Obscene Publications Act, leading to the Video Recordings Act 1984. 39 titles were successfully prosecuted outright, highlighting how graphic violence had become a censorship battleground, though only a handful are considered extreme cinema nowadays. The Italian film
Cannibal Holocaust (1980), blended documentary conventions with animal cruelty and dismemberment. Its found‑footage realism led to legal investigations on its director Ruggero Deodato and helped inaugurate the modern “found‑footage horror” subgenre, including movies such as
The Blair Witch Project (1999)., and its graphic, realistic content led to it getting banned in various countries, including
Australia, though it would be unbanned in 2005.
Mondo films Some
mondo films, like the
Traces of Death series (starting in 1993), compiled real-life footage of deaths and accidents with little to no context or educational value, leading to the first
Traces of Death to be banned in the UK in 2005, due to belief that the film was violating the
Video Recordings Act 1984 and the
Obscene Publications Act 1959, while others, such as the first
Faces of Death (1978) was allowed at
18 with cuts due to scenes of animal cruelty, after being seized for obscenity for 20 years. A 1997 incident involving a Pennsylvania woman who lodged formal complaints after renting
Traces of Death drew public attention to its release.
Asian Extreme era In the late 1990s and early 2000s, Western critics coined “Asian Extreme” for a wave of Japanese and other East Asian films that combined supernatural horror with graphic violence and sexual transgression. Key early entries include
Ring (1998),
Audition (1999),
Battle Royale (2000),
Ichi the Killer (2001) and
Oldboy (2003). Directors such as Takashi Miike and Park Chan‑wook pushed splatter and torture visually to new levels. While not all films in this category managed to reach the extremity of later entries, their violent and transgressive content helped coin the label "extreme cinema" as a term to describe such movies. This era also marked a shift where extreme content was not just for shock, but was a form of stylization. The Japanese film,
Grotesque (2009), quickly became notorious due to its graphic violence, leading it to get rejected by the
BBFC, as the story follows a sadistic doctor that tortures a young couple after abducting them.
New French Extremity and Balkan Shock Cinema In a 2004 Artforum essay, James Quandt labeled a cluster of early‑2000s French films "
New French Extremity", noting their blend of arthouse style and unrelenting body horror. Films such as
Irréversible (2002),
Inside (2007), and
Martyrs (2008) typify this period's formal experimentation and nihilistic violence.
Irréversible became one of the most notable of these extreme French films due to having a graphic 10-minute long
rape scene, as well as
graphic violence in a scene where a man beats another character to death with a fire extinguisher. One of the most notorious examples of extreme cinema is
A Serbian Film (2010), which exploited taboos of
sexual violence towards children and
necrophilia as allegories of Serbia's political and cultural exploitation. including Australia.
American avant-garde experimental films As distribution shifted from
VHS to
DVD,
Blu-ray and
video on demand, low-budget American directors kept testing the limits of what they could get away with.
The Bunny Game (2011), was banned in the UK for its prolonged depiction of a prostitute being abducted and subjected to prolonged sexual and physical violence, with the
BBFC citing that the content would risk potential harm towards the public, and would violate the
Video Recordings Act 1984. The film,
Reality Killers (2005) was also banned due to the film possessing extreme focus on sadism and violence, where the narrator endorses the actions of the killers, while women are treated as sexual objects that are meant to be abused.
Extreme horror franchises The first
Saw movie made over $100 million worldwide on a budget of $1 million, being a strong box-office success. This led to more than ten
Saw movies being made and the franchise becoming
one of the most successful horror franchises. Another extreme horror film that became a franchise was
Terrifier, a film about
Art the Clown, a slasher villain known for his extremely brutal and torturous kills, which caused the franchise to be well known for its
graphic violence. Due to this,
Damien Leone decided not to allow any of the
Terrifier films to be rated by the
MPA to avoid the
NC-17 rating.
Terrifier 3, the third entry in the franchise, would later go on to make over $90 million worldwide on a budget of $2 million, becoming the highest-grossing unrated film. == Notable films ==